Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA young girl sets out to tame a wild horse so she can enter him in a race.A young girl sets out to tame a wild horse so she can enter him in a race.A young girl sets out to tame a wild horse so she can enter him in a race.
Ray Bennett
- Pronto
- (uncredited)
Phil Bloom
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Johnny Carpenter
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Sonny Chorre
- Indian
- (uncredited)
Edmund Cobb
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
Black Velvet, a "killer" stallion terrorises the range. Two people, a reformed badman and a tomboyish farmer's daughter, think they can tame him (and each other, naturally). Only Chill Will's typical character acting distinguishes this very minor and rather childish western. Weak:(4 out of
Zane Grey gets the full Technicolor treatment, with Howard Duff trying to catch and train the greatest mustang ever, but requiring Edgar Buchanan and top-billed Ann Blyth. She's a tomboy, from the top of her perfectly marcelled hair, to her sculpted eyebows, red painted lips and ivory skin. Duff may be the man who catches Black Velvet, but it's Miss Blyth's mysterious power over horses -- horsepower, I call it -- that gets the animal trained.
It's one of Universal's "Shaky A" westerns, with quite a cast. George Brent, Chill Wills, Jane Darwell, Lloyd Bridges, but the beauty of it is not in the story as directed by George Sherman, but the way that Irving Glassberg's camera captured Ford country: so bright you can't look, air so clear, you can see everything. It's shot in Ford Country, but Ford's cameramen made the landscape a mythic dreamscape, where the cowboys shake off dust that no one ever raises, just the godlike wind. In Sherman's movie, everything is just as bright, but when people trod on the red, dry ground, they're the once who raise the dust; and everyone, comic sidekick Buchanan aside, is always perfectly clean. It's not the godlike land that makes the story here. The land is the setting, godlike people make the story.
It's one of Universal's "Shaky A" westerns, with quite a cast. George Brent, Chill Wills, Jane Darwell, Lloyd Bridges, but the beauty of it is not in the story as directed by George Sherman, but the way that Irving Glassberg's camera captured Ford country: so bright you can't look, air so clear, you can see everything. It's shot in Ford Country, but Ford's cameramen made the landscape a mythic dreamscape, where the cowboys shake off dust that no one ever raises, just the godlike wind. In Sherman's movie, everything is just as bright, but when people trod on the red, dry ground, they're the once who raise the dust; and everyone, comic sidekick Buchanan aside, is always perfectly clean. It's not the godlike land that makes the story here. The land is the setting, godlike people make the story.
Universal Pictures splurged a little with this one going on location and using
color for this entertaining B western populated with a cast of familiar western
faces for Red Canyon. The film is based on a Zane Grey novel about a cowboy
trying to catch a beautiful black stallion and leader of a pack of wild horses.
The horse can fly and he might make a good race horse Howard Duff reasons.
Might even impress Ann Blyth the daughter of the local Ponderosa owner
George Brent.
What Ann and George don't know about Duff is that he's also the son of a local outlaw leader John McIntire. Many years back McIntire and his gang killed Ann's mother during a gunfight.
The plot goes about as you would expect it to go but the western vistas in Kanab, Utah are a beautiful sight. Add to the folks already mentioned people like Jane Darwell, Edgar Buchanan, Chill Wills, and Denver Pyle all who are most familiar western faces and in roles you would expect them to be in and it adds up to nice western entertainment.
No new ground broken in Red Canyon, but well cultivated old ground indeed.
What Ann and George don't know about Duff is that he's also the son of a local outlaw leader John McIntire. Many years back McIntire and his gang killed Ann's mother during a gunfight.
The plot goes about as you would expect it to go but the western vistas in Kanab, Utah are a beautiful sight. Add to the folks already mentioned people like Jane Darwell, Edgar Buchanan, Chill Wills, and Denver Pyle all who are most familiar western faces and in roles you would expect them to be in and it adds up to nice western entertainment.
No new ground broken in Red Canyon, but well cultivated old ground indeed.
The movie based on Zane Grey's novel has a formidable combination of of acceptable performances , espectacular races , drama , and gorgeous outdoors . The hothouse plot drives relentlessly forward with noisy action , thrills , shootouts and turns . It deals with a young girl Lucy Bostel (Anne Blyth) set out to tame a wild horse called Highland Dale and leader of a pack of wild horses , so she can enter him in a race , but this horse is subsequently tamed by Sloane (Howard Duff) . As Sloane has the fastest black stallion in the desert to come to her aid, and of course , they fall in love . Along the way they find adventure, betrayal and romance . However , Sloane has a gunfigher family and and their chief results to be his father (John McIntire despite being only a few years their senior in actual life) and a main member , his brother ( Lloyd Bridges) . From The Studio That Gave You "Canyon Passage" ,
Decent , gleaming Western with noisy action , go riding , pursuits , horse races , and shootouts . This glittering picture results to be an ordinary oater but containing some novelties as the peculiar relationship between a father : John McIntire and his son : Howard Keel , but it also has the usual elements as gundown, horse chases , and treason. There are overwhelming and breathtaking scenes about wild horses running here and there that after were reused for other movies , such as : Cattle Drive and Black Horse Canyon , the latter with Joel McCrea chasing the black house . The picture was well starred by the sweet Anne Blyth .Her first starring role was an inauspicious one opposite Sonny Tufts in Swell Guy (1946), but she finally began gaining some momentum again. Instead of offering her musical gifts, she continued her serious streak with Killer McCoy (1947) and a dangerously calculated role in Another Part of the Forest (1948), a prequel to The Fox (1941) in which Blyth played the Bette Davis role of Regina at a younger age. Her attempts at lighter comedy were mild at best, playing a fetching creature of the sea opposite William Powell in Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid (1948) and a teen infatuated with a much-older film star, Robert Montgomery, in Once More, My Darling (1949). Co-starred by the usually wooden Howard Keel who played a lot of Westerns. Howard career went into a period of moviemaking in which his films were more noted for its entertainment and rousing action than as character-driven pieces. A number of them were routine westerns that paired him opposite some of Hollywood's loveliest ladies : this Red Canyon (1949) , Calamity Jane and Sam Bass (1949) with Yvonne De Carlo and The Lady from Texas (1951) with Mona Freeman. Other adventure-oriented flicks that more or less came and went included Spaceways (1953), Tanganika (1954),The Yellow Mountain (1954), Flame of the Islands (1955), Blackjack Ketchum, Desperado (1956) and Sierra Stranger (1957). And finishing as a prestigious TV series actor as Bonanza ,Twilight zone , Combat ¡ and Flaming Road .Both protagonists are well supported by a good support cast , such as : the veteran George Brent , Edgar Buchanan , Lloyd Bridges , John McIntire , Denvel Pyle , the incombustible Chill Wills , and here Jane Darwell steals the show as a sympathetic and laughing spinster aunt .
It contains a rousing and moving musical score by Walter Scharf. As well as glimmer Cinematography in shining Technicolor by Irving Glassberg , being shot on location in Kanab, Paria, Utah, Kaibab National Forest, Arizona , Boynton Canyon, Courthouse Butte, Sedona, Arizona . The motion picture was competently made by George Sherman in B-style , though has some flaws and gaps . Entertainment , atmosphere , action and excitement surge along with the tale under the hand of filmmaker George Sherman , who is clearly more at home with the thrilling scenes than somewhat excessively talking storyline . Sherman made reliable low-budget fares for Columbia between 1945-48, then moved on to do the same at Universal for another eight years . Sherman specialized almost exclusively in "B" westerns there , including the "Three Musketeers" series, which featured a young John Wayne. George directed lots of Westerns as ¨The Last of the Fast Guns¨ , ¨The Lone Hand¨, ¨Santa Fe stampede¨ , ¨Red skin¨ , ¨Chief Crazy Horse¨ ¨Calamity Jane¨, ¨Relentless¨ , ¨Comanche Territory¨ , ¨Dawn at Socorro¨, ¨Border River¨ and many others . He also made occasional forays into action and horror themes, often achieving a sense of style over substance . The only "A"-grade films to his credit were two westerns starring John Wayne: ¨Comancheros¨ (1961) (as producer) and ¨The big Jack¨ (1971) . His last films were realized in Spain as "Find That Girl" , ¨The new Cinderella¨ and ¨Joaquin Murrieta¨. Rating : 6/10 . Acceptable and passable . Well worth watching.
Decent , gleaming Western with noisy action , go riding , pursuits , horse races , and shootouts . This glittering picture results to be an ordinary oater but containing some novelties as the peculiar relationship between a father : John McIntire and his son : Howard Keel , but it also has the usual elements as gundown, horse chases , and treason. There are overwhelming and breathtaking scenes about wild horses running here and there that after were reused for other movies , such as : Cattle Drive and Black Horse Canyon , the latter with Joel McCrea chasing the black house . The picture was well starred by the sweet Anne Blyth .Her first starring role was an inauspicious one opposite Sonny Tufts in Swell Guy (1946), but she finally began gaining some momentum again. Instead of offering her musical gifts, she continued her serious streak with Killer McCoy (1947) and a dangerously calculated role in Another Part of the Forest (1948), a prequel to The Fox (1941) in which Blyth played the Bette Davis role of Regina at a younger age. Her attempts at lighter comedy were mild at best, playing a fetching creature of the sea opposite William Powell in Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid (1948) and a teen infatuated with a much-older film star, Robert Montgomery, in Once More, My Darling (1949). Co-starred by the usually wooden Howard Keel who played a lot of Westerns. Howard career went into a period of moviemaking in which his films were more noted for its entertainment and rousing action than as character-driven pieces. A number of them were routine westerns that paired him opposite some of Hollywood's loveliest ladies : this Red Canyon (1949) , Calamity Jane and Sam Bass (1949) with Yvonne De Carlo and The Lady from Texas (1951) with Mona Freeman. Other adventure-oriented flicks that more or less came and went included Spaceways (1953), Tanganika (1954),The Yellow Mountain (1954), Flame of the Islands (1955), Blackjack Ketchum, Desperado (1956) and Sierra Stranger (1957). And finishing as a prestigious TV series actor as Bonanza ,Twilight zone , Combat ¡ and Flaming Road .Both protagonists are well supported by a good support cast , such as : the veteran George Brent , Edgar Buchanan , Lloyd Bridges , John McIntire , Denvel Pyle , the incombustible Chill Wills , and here Jane Darwell steals the show as a sympathetic and laughing spinster aunt .
It contains a rousing and moving musical score by Walter Scharf. As well as glimmer Cinematography in shining Technicolor by Irving Glassberg , being shot on location in Kanab, Paria, Utah, Kaibab National Forest, Arizona , Boynton Canyon, Courthouse Butte, Sedona, Arizona . The motion picture was competently made by George Sherman in B-style , though has some flaws and gaps . Entertainment , atmosphere , action and excitement surge along with the tale under the hand of filmmaker George Sherman , who is clearly more at home with the thrilling scenes than somewhat excessively talking storyline . Sherman made reliable low-budget fares for Columbia between 1945-48, then moved on to do the same at Universal for another eight years . Sherman specialized almost exclusively in "B" westerns there , including the "Three Musketeers" series, which featured a young John Wayne. George directed lots of Westerns as ¨The Last of the Fast Guns¨ , ¨The Lone Hand¨, ¨Santa Fe stampede¨ , ¨Red skin¨ , ¨Chief Crazy Horse¨ ¨Calamity Jane¨, ¨Relentless¨ , ¨Comanche Territory¨ , ¨Dawn at Socorro¨, ¨Border River¨ and many others . He also made occasional forays into action and horror themes, often achieving a sense of style over substance . The only "A"-grade films to his credit were two westerns starring John Wayne: ¨Comancheros¨ (1961) (as producer) and ¨The big Jack¨ (1971) . His last films were realized in Spain as "Find That Girl" , ¨The new Cinderella¨ and ¨Joaquin Murrieta¨. Rating : 6/10 . Acceptable and passable . Well worth watching.
All the usual suspects like big mouth edgar buchanan, chill wills, denver pyle and john mcintyre playing the nasty bad guy ... howard duff as the love interest of the beautiful ann blyth ... this western is well worth watching just to see ann blyth ...
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesUniversal-International later re-used footage of the horse Highland Dale in Cattle Drive (1951) and Black Horse Canyon (1954).
- ConnexionsFeatured in Cattle Drive (1951)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Frente al destino
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 22m(82 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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